FALL RIVER — The New England Patriots are opposing requests from Aaron Hernandez’s lawyers that the team hand over copies of a psychological assessment and scouting reports that were completed before the Patriots drafted the former tight end in 2010.

Patriots attorney Andrew Phelan told a Fall River Superior Court judge on Wednesday that the team had already agreed to provide 317 pages of documents from Hernandez’s personnel file and that the Patriots offered Hernandez’s lawyers an opportunity to view a page-and-half summary of a “football personality/psychological assessment” conducted at the 2010 NFL Scouting Combine.

The Patriots told Hernandez’s lawyers to obtain the Scouting Combine report — known as a TAP Athletic Profile — from The Right Profile, a Chicago-based vendor that compiled the assessment. The defense team balked at that suggestion, as did the Patriots when Hernandez’s lawyers said they wanted to visit the team’s Foxboro offices and view internal scouting reports, which Phelan said contain proprietary trade secrets.

Judge Raymond P. Veary did not rule on Hernandez’s request; Veary scheduled a new hearing for July 22 to give all parties due notice and the opportunity to read new memorandums and affidavits that were filed Wednesday afternoon in Bristol County Superior Court.

Hernandez’s lawyers wants the Patriots to provide medical documents, psychological test results, any drug or alcohol abuse-related records, internal scouting and investigative reports, as well as X-rays, MRIs and CT scans from Hernandez’s three years with the organization.

Defense attorney Michael Fee said those records are important to determine Hernandez’s state of mind prior to, and on the night of, the June 2013 murder of Odin Lloyd, 27, in North Attleborough. Prosecutors allege Hernandez, 24, orchestrated Lloyd’s murder after a disagreement they had two nights earlier at a Boston nightclub.

“We believe (the psychological assessment) is imminently relevant, imminently useful, for the criminal defense case,” Fee said, adding that the Patriots never responded to two letters and a phone call seeking Hernandez’s personnel records.

“We never expected in a million years that the Patriots would refuse to even acknowledge that a request had been received,” Fee said.

The scouting reports, Fee suggested, also have evidentiary value because they may contain observations about Hernandez’s personality and character traits. Fee said the scouting reports may refute rumors and speculation that Hernandez was involved in “prior bad acts” while he played football at the University of Florida from 2007 to 2009.

Phelan said the defense team’s request for the scouting reports is a “fishing expedition” because the reports, which were generated prior to the 2010 NFL Draft, do not contain information relevant to Hernandez’s mental state on the night that Lloyd was killed.

According to court documents, the Patriots have nine pages of scouting reports on Hernandez from 2009 to 2010 that consist of his statistics from high school and college, as well as his injury history, athletic ability, assessments of his performance on football assessment drills, comparisons with other NFL prospects, and brief blurbs from scouts about his personality, character and ability to compete in the NFL.

Assistant District Attorney Patrick Bomberg, one of the two prosecutors on the Hernandez case, told the judge Wednesday that suggesting that the scouting reports present a definitive study of Hernandez’s alleged prior criminality “is not supportable on its face” because there is no way to know whether Hernandez concealed anything about his personal background from the Patriots’ scouts prior to the draft.

The Patriots selected Hernandez, a highly touted college prospect, 113th overall in the fourth round of the 2010 NFL Draft. Widely considered to be a first-round talent, Hernandez’s draft stock fell amidst reports of alleged drug use in college.

Hernandez, who played for the Patriots from 2010 to 2013, signed a waiver authorizing the team to release his personnel file, including psychological testing and “social worker information,” to his lawyers, according to court documents. Phelan, the Patriots’ attorney, said the team will hand over 95 percent of the requested personnel records when Hernandez provides a signed, updated release-authorization form.

The Patriots released Hernandez, 24, on the same day last summer that he was arrested and charged with murder and firearm offenses stemming from Lloyd’s murder in the North Attleborough Industrial Park.